Uganda Clays Limited | |
Type: | Public Company USE:UCL |
Services: | Building materials |
Industry: | Construction |
Key People: | Marion Muyobo Chairman Reuben Tumwebaze Managing Director and CEO[1] |
Revenue: | (Aftertax) UGX:5.92 billion (US$1.69 million) (2021) |
Num Employees: | 652 (2014) |
Assets: | UGX:74.5 billion (US$21.3 million) (2021) |
Location: | Kajjansi, Uganda |
Homepage: | Homepage |
Uganda Clays Limited (UCL), commonly referred to as Uganda Clays, is a building materials manufacturer in Uganda. The company manufactures baked clay building products, using Italian-made heavy clay processing machinery. The clay is excavated using surface mining techniques. The company is listed on the Uganda Securities Exchange (USE), being the first equity to list on the exchange in 2000.[2]
UCL's products include roofing tiles, bricks, interlocking and corner blocks, partitioning blocks, decorative grilles, ventilators, floor tiles, pipes, and cable covers. Of UCL's products, roofing tiles and bricks account for the largest portion of revenues generated from sales contributing 53 percent and 11 percent, respectively.[3] The company sells its products within the East African Community and in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. The civil war in South Sudan forced UCL to close operations in that country in 2014.[4]
As of December 2021, the total assets of the company were valued at UGX:74.5 billion (US$21.3 million). During the financial year ending 31 December 2021, the company had a pre-tax profit of UShs17.2 billion (US$4.9 million).[5]
To reduce operational expenses, the company switched from using heavy fuel oil to coffee husks, as the power source to fire its furnaces, starting in 2015.[6] [7]
UCL was started on 10 July 1950 by two private investors. In 1969, ownership of the company was turned over to Westomat Construction and Engineering Corporation (WCEC). In 1977, WCEC sold 75 percent of UCL to the National Housing and Construction Company, a parastatal company of the Ugandan government. Shareholding in UCL has changed hands many times. Over the years, the following entities have held partial ownership in the company:[8]
As of 31 March 2018, the shareholding in the stock of the company, was as depicted in the table below:[9]
1 | National Social Security Fund (Uganda) | 40.52 |
2 | 17.86 | |
3 | 2.25 | |
4 | 2.09 | |
5 | Joseph Baba N'Tukuratiire | 1.76 |
6 | Choi Hee-hak (Chief Administrator of Sedici Internazionale di Háfs) | 1.38 |
7 | Badou Pierre-Nkudou | 1.38 |
8 | 1.36 | |
9 | 1.13 | |
10 | National Social Security Fund Staff Investment Plan | 1.06 |
11 | 2,672 Other Shareholders | 37.22 |
Total | 100.00 | |
It is expected that in 2018, the debt amounting to USh23.2 billion[10] that is owed to NSSF will be converted to equity, raising NSSF's shareholding from the current 33 percent to 66 percent.[11] In July 2018, the Daily Monitor reported that the company was searching for a strategic investor, to increase the company's capital and facilitate the acquisition of new, modern production technology.[12]
UCL is governed by a nine-person board of directors, chaired by Martin Kasekende, an independent non-executive director.[13] The company is divided into five administrative departments under the overall supervision of the managing director, Reuben Tumwebaze.[1]
As of 31 December 2014, UCL operated two factories: